The Procedure
I had always been told that at the age of 50 a person was
supposed to get a colonoscopy. Well, I blew by 50 and had no intention of
volunteering for that. I had heard Bill's horror stories and was fine laughing
at his bungee experiences. Laughing along with him of course, not at him.
When the appointed day came, I had done all my prerequisites
and was ready for my procedure. My son drove me out to the Bungee Center
to dropped me off. We laughed all the way and made all the butt jokes we could
think of on the way out. It reminded me of being 18 again. This could actually
turn out to be fun. My wife was coming out later to drive me home. A person
can't drive themselves home after the procedure. The drugs wear off slowly and
people typically come in and out of consciousness and have a tendency to forget
things and repeat themselves while recovering. I liked the idea of forgetting
things, in fact, I was hoping to forget the whole process and just wake up at
home.
As I donned nothing but a beautiful white, backless,
strapless gown and sat on the gurney with an IV in my arm, the DDC and HER
assistant came in to talk with me briefly before going into the procedure room.
Yep, the Doctor of the Dreaded Colonoscopy was a woman, and so was her
assistant. I wanted to call the whole thing off right there. I don't consider
myself a sexist person, female doctors, dentists, and CEOs are fine with me.
But a female Bungee Doctor? I wasn't sure I could go through with this. She even
showed me the 'scope' they were going to use in all it's grandeur, and length.
She told me I would probably be awake during the procedure and could watch on
the monitor and ask questions. I said, "Like who won the 1987 NBA
championship? I didn't even get a grin
out of her, just a look that said, "I feel sorry for your wife."
One thing I did have going for me, is the fact that drugs effect
me strongly and quickly. I did not stay awake during the procedure, I was
completely out before it started, I didn't watch on the monitor, and I still don't
know who won the 1987 NBA championship.
My first post procedure memory is waking up and seeing my
wife in the recovery room. She had come to pick me up and take me home. She didn't
look particularly happy though. I figured she might need some joviality at this
time to help relieve the stress of seeing me in this situation. I looked at her
in a serious manner and said, "The doctor said they found my head."
She looked at me, even more perturbed, and replied, "That's
about the tenth time you've told someone that. It's time to just be quiet so we
can get out of here."
The Doc said I don't need to come back for 10 years, but I'm
shootin' for 20.